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SUNDAY

ORTH JERSEY'S ONLY WEEKLY PICTORIAL- MAGAZINE

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Fair Lawn

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Prospect Park

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NOVEMBER 8, 1959 ß Terry Brenn.n Visits Serf. Club of P.terson

VOL. XXXI, No.45 ß. . -- ?.½... ,::ß .:... .: :; ß ...... ß• ß .. .' .. WHITE' and SHAUGER, Inc. ß: -...,-'..:.::::.:'" :i:!...:•...;:.-.::'" ...... ,f,...: '..j.. ...: ;;%%> ... ß A Good Name to Remember for - ...... " i ½: ..::::,.:-:.. . ..:(':..?..•'• .' :' .---' II It ½7ß ..-:-;:----::",":'/..../.,..:.•:..•i•½..... t'::•i': . i .:.::...... --, ...... :. . ::::•...-.'-' :'i.•..'.j:';:...:.::-, ,,,:-. ... ;: . ß'- . FURNITURE ,. ..- l, .:.. ':' '"""'"- '•%i-':" - .- ..-<'•: "' ...... 7 ' ..•::.•*:,";:"':*-•::'' :..::;.":.? Living Room - Bed Room ' ß'_ - " '""- " ':' ' ....i'' .. ß ' "''-:-'....' ":'.,.:.!:'i::'::;.i!:i:-2::.': '"::::f'":::"":"' ...... i-8:"'"""' '""""'':" ..-.:'i '!fi'" '" Dining Room -' :{i --.:•::.....ß ...... ',',--?:-:,:..'-- "-'-."-'"'/ -..' ....:-"-:':%2..'?".½:.:•::!::*::..:•:ii::.,..::E::...,: "•"<'....' RUGS AND CARPETS A SPECIALTY ' .. '. .i:...,.:..;%-' •.'-" '":::;.-'.";-?'".'.'"':'::.'-;?'. ß Quality and Low Price .;:- ...'-..:'-'.-:f. ß ß.--,, -. :.. :::.:x;/'" . .,...:; . 39 Years Serving the Public • _..'-"'"[?.'::":.':;-':.' ";:'::i•:::-*; ..... ::" :.':::.":•?'*::' . .::$'-..,,,,...,.,:-<'...'-,??'-. .'.:! .....-?..:.:'- ...... 435 t!lTlgAIGll'r STlgE• (• 29th Ave•) PAT•I•ON, N.J. -- ;..:.:.....i'.':.::;::::::-.:'->':::':*.>" '.... '. '"f':...::•.:: ..--"½.".'•' 'eFhePlace wilh the C!O•" -- M'UI• 4-*•880 ...... -..:...... ?....4<.-.: :.%..:;.:....! ß-- : ß.:... i::::."::.:!;...:.'"'..' .-.'.:...:'-'-::'? - ß....'?•:,•:..". Hemlqu•rters for, EngagedCouples .. ' ::.-.-:e.. ' :::::.'.'"*:"::'•.;:'"-'::'i:::':::." ii;;"'"'if:..'':.:::'. '..,.,': * '; ...... ' . "%-':«'?•...'•';"'-"':" "<:'.-',"f,:-'.•'- ' ."' .:.;-'::,..?."-½.'*!::.:*** ' ' .::f,.... -- '...'. "::,.' -ff' '.,,• -"..,. ': .- .... :. -.:::x-..:. ß ":::.:'-:::.-'.-':'....2:' >'...j.;-: "'.. ' " '.. ':': ::::... "':- ß" •.• . -' :,.Zf.,:";'..:':..i:-.':..::.-.¾"-..!.::::Y4"'.,.-.•:..A?. -•'"':....'::-.• . •."' ½. .- ß'::.:..;.:"' ,...:...... :. .'-.::i:':::'-'-'-.:.::.-:i!: ." ::'::..:;x:":':.'.:. : :•':.:-: ':¾ :-. :.'""•.."". ½.'.:.:'";" "'"" ";*.... :'-?',..,''.:;:.....;...;:!. :.:.:i•:8:.'::""::x :'.:.: • ':½':'.:',..•.i.'" -.•:%:" %.,,;_': .•. ' '-.;,---,•' .":.:'":':'::'".::'.-. ß.-::'.::::::':' .... THE IDEAL PLACETO DINE AND WINE ß'"" :.:-i,%..:.....:..:;•...%..... -.?.'S<.:.•'" ;.;;, :::... •".•.. - -•,..,..,•.• .' .:..'.:..½:.., ".:.:'.::"!::-.i:.•.:;.-.!'.'%:;::;.-4 ....;....:..;...;¾•.._....:.:, .... ß ::,•-:..;j;. :. ;::::. :,. ,. ß . o ß...;::.: o,(::...:.:::::.:::.... ß iß ::.i::.::•::.-..',:::..'::'?::;ii:.jii.• •!•i•:•?....½;::i?:•?½?.::??/:•...i!::i; :..::.:!::... ..'-;:::..::.'r:.!::•i:.'::i:.4iii*-'"';::'%..:;:•:::.-:..:,:..'.:..".-. .•, '- :...... ' '3.::'(::'..:;2 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. ::::,: , .:::..;..;.-i..:i•!::;::.:... -'? .... ,:.•,..:, ' ' •..:.'.:-:::':½ ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.• i:!: •. x:-.':;.:::::: ::i:'-' ß ,,, ß :.•.•:,:.;"-•ß.,..,.;.. ;.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:-:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.: ======::::::::::: ::½:::::::..:.:.>:... •- ß.• ..,,;.:. ;.;-. ... :-:.• :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. ....•.:..'..:'.4:-.. ITAI.IA#.AME. ICAI• '1•n • q ...' .-. , :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::...... :.•.,, SEA•00D •; <' q ß. ::::::::::::::::::::::======:-':-:::...... ,'. .... ':- ..>"" ...•:..-,x.w .. +..: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::..:':"::::--.:-..:' .:..... -.%,..--..

:: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::, ß ....::.:. -•:..•...... •.>>.,• .. ß BROILED LOBSTER TROUT - MALIBU½ - SALMON - •SIMPS- •C•LKOP - ? OYSTS•S - CL• - COD F!• - SWOSD ! GE•SHWIN SHOW -- Marge Championand Vic Damoneare 161 BELMONTAVE (Ocr. Burhans).HALEDO• - - - • nong the top headliners who will perform in the alI-Gershwin I•ow of the "Telephone Hour" colorcast Friday, Nov. 20 on the NEIC.TV Network. The one-hour program also will feature Gower l•hampion, Ella Fitzgerald, Andre Previn, Polly Bergen, and Donald Voorhees conductins the Bell Orchestra. .

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ß .• ß ' ':i .. "' . .' • ' -• ' : ".'½. x; I. PA.RRILLO 200 EAST IgIDGEW•OOD AVENUE , '' . :•.. '""•.., "., . • ., :..',e .: .-. . ,.. .•': ...... -::-,,.k.... • '"'" ' "': '" i ' >"'•' RIDGEWOOD, N. J. ',' '...... •'...... : . .-.-::;...•-..'-:: ,,,,;.' ' .:•h. • ....•,.'"•' ' ':.V,..:, •.-d•".C•J::•'"'....ß: ,; GI 5-3342 GI 4-9891 ;THANKSGIVINGDAY PARADER -- Thishuge spaceman will be . one of-the mammoth, helium.filled balloons which are a traditional 'part of. the annual Macy'sThanksgiving Day Parade,to be tcle- 'cast on the NBC-TV'Network Thursday, Hov. 26. ShirleyTe.rnple Lef fhe manfrom Equilablebring you peace of m:nd •and her children,on the storybookfloat, will lead the New York i holiday procession,which will also include other TV and movie ' stars, spectacular floats and marchin•l bands. Page T•vo ThecHEONICL•I• f: •.. THE • ß...... ,. -:'..(•.•...... ' .it..:_::. '..;.".. ,. .. ..• . . .•-..•.•i]:.: ,-• z '"' 4... .:•i.

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Published Weekly by •:!:ii%.:::•:•':' ' " .....*:•..:"•. .. THE CHRONICLE COM•PANY •:•%., .:-•.. - - :..:...:...... -.i.i/•:' '•:. ..?'].•.:;?.'.i•:-:; ';•:..' •;;½{.-.,.;.::•::.11. 170-172 Butler Street Pater•)n, N.J. ":" ' . ß ß : +:' ...v.....

LAmbert 5-2741 ';:)•:.:;.:';•?•:'" ':',".:i'.i: ..!::!-:::•.":::•:i' • :;---•'•i.•.-.;,.---• '•::::::•'... •..... ";':.'." '"i,' ß,. .:'.'..:.:..-.<'. .: - .'.:.: • , ., , ... .:::...... ::-.:..x.::-.:.. ß.- VINCENT S. PARRILLO, Managing Editor ß ,"]'d•'+-:%';:, ß ß•'-;?'•.'.-4 •,•,"':::: ß ,--•::':: ' ' \x. ::':";:-•:•- .:•....:.:. :.:.::!:s::.!::..'•i:'.:;:?.i'.";:.i•:....--:•!" .::'..::' ' .::.:'. .. ß ,•:•:'::-'ß ,.•.,..: -'...+-'%'q.:-'..' .,, .' '•...... •..- .:.\ ...... ":: . -%'•,, •' -.•: ,.....::-'.-' , ß,• ...... •i.:.::...... :.::..::.....:...:..::•::::..:i•.:'.-!.•:•::!.•;•:. i::•i::-:i•: --•..•.. . t.¾•'i'-.'..-":•:'.'•. ,:.::';:•...:.-;...... ß •, '- ....:..:::..- , •. -..... •,.$- '::!!...:.: ...... •..•.:;.:•• .•-.•':..,, •::-:': ß... Entered as Second Class matter August 24, 1926, at the Post , ß ik. ...- ';- t .... "**'::•?-i•:•'1•.-:.i!?.i•-i•:½.;" ..:i Office at Paterson, N.J., under the act of March 3, 1879. x .. ..., •i• "':k& : '"'.'....4i:i½.:i•:•::"::•. . :,. ?...-:.-•...•,':!:"/"...... '??:'.•.. :. .?.....'-. •] ' ß...... ;;•5 •?:'""'?d.:•";•;•:•?.:•:½:t:,•.... :,•'!•';?'-•'•"•'•.:• NOVEMBER 8, 1959 --- VOL. XXXi, No. 45 .- \ 1. :+ ß'- % -:'•{. ': .... '½?.....::-:.-':.-.:•: -,,.:..... • "'-i•!•::.;•P:' :-:-": ß'-' ..- ',,,... ß •_•; "• ...... : ß.,•-•.',•.. ' .:•:..,. , ,,.,..' ,.::::::" ..-':!8:..::i:i:s.!:i'"%...:.....,,.,,...,:.:...... , ...... :'-:?-:-'. '::::::!"-""':•;?:'".'.-.-.::....-.-..:...; 1:.,...,.,: i:::::".!'!i::i::!:?..:...::.•..-..'.::...... :•...... "...' -::... ß'. - _ ..... •:- : .v " .-:: ..• / ':•i...... i:-:::-:-:-.'.': :!:;:i::&:...<::".--:•...... ?•[• • .::i•:i:':-!-:..:t-- -y.4: i. ß .-.'...... ,•. . x...' ß.-.:.--:•:',,::-':-::.•:...•: :--- -../ .. .•.-,...... •-:'.-.-:2 .4..-..:•"• . -k.,-'•; ß-'...... '-...-..-:::-:.:-'-:-:-:.... .-.:.:.:.;.:.:.:.:.;--.%,,,,,,?• .•-:-:ß/'"'"'?.--':.-..-'?d::i•-?:,,:?.-.:.'"-'. +:.:-::: % :.: ----.--:.:.:.. ß--: •.--..- ' .:.'-.::..::.. .::•'--.'.. - .-ß Single Copy 10 Cents $5.00 a Year by Mail ...... ß.'.;•½•¾-•,,..' '.., ß' ß.' '"- ' '-:::,-!::.".t'-.'-4..--'. "-?::.,::.-..•..-:.:....=:•a...... "\ .-.--:::'-<::::•,:•::.:'...:::..":'.::.:•'•!•.•;ti:;:!"-:•:!••"•{•-::•.;'-'i::::-g l':i;•,::•::.::.•.::' ,-' ,--,.•.?...-i :- ' ß

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CONTENTS ßß ."-:..:' ':::f..• ..::! ,:,-....:.... ' ..... -...,.•,•. : .:...... '.. '""'i.. 4 .....: ,, ß . --':'"4:.•' --a;;,, .-.x..,...... "- ':' - • '"" . "' :..--:." .i. . ß

'THE MAN AND THE CHALLENGE'--George Nader stars as Glenn Barton,a scientistassigned by the .governmentto test the limits of FEATURES human endurance against the worst that nature and science can provide,and JoyceMeadows makes a guestappearance in-the new NBC-TV Network action-adventureseries p•'oducedon the Saturday schedule by Ivan Tots. Chronicle of the Week

Short Story 14

American History 15

DEPARTMENTS

Social World ......

Editorials 8

Editor Speaks 8

Complete Television .11-12-13

•-.:i. Terry Brennan, former head football coach, at theUniversity • of Notre Dame, is shown being greeted by Joseph A. Abbott .iat a dinner meeting of the Serra Club of Paterson, held at the "Hamilton Club, Paterson. In the photo, left to right, are' Jo- seph A. Abbott, who is the president of .the club; Terry Bren- 'FIBBER McGEE AND MOLLY' -- Bob Sweeney, as the new Fibber, nan, and Vincent S. Parrillo, publisher of the Chronicle. Back andCathy Lewis, as understandingMolly, star whenall of the Wist- ....row, John G. Kotran, James G. Cahill, First Vice President; ful Vista neighborscome to life in the new NBCTelevision Network . and John Creegan. series scheduled Tuesday nights.

.,., •I•e CHRONI• Page Three New Legislation To Stem Fisheries Have, Caught Boat Thefts More Fish This Year ß he gTowi•g "b]ackrna:ket" i• The U.S. fishing industry has stolen boats is expected to be ef- had a productive year. In the first fectively curbed according to seven months of 1959, commercial Salvator A. Bontempo, Commis- fisheries took in more than two sioner of the New Jersey Depart- billion pounds of fish and shell- ment of Conservation, by the pas- fish, up 17 per cent from the cor- sage of legislative bill A-15 now responding period of last year. pending. The great bulk of the increase The bill, which is scheduled to was in menhaden, fish used prin- come before the State legislators cipally for oil and livestock feed. shortly, provides for an expanded However, the A!askan salmon marine patrol system as well as catch is down about 50 per cent for the registration and number- from a year ago. ing of all boats using motors greater than 10'horse power. At present, such registration is re- Mental Health Exhibits In quired only on inland waters, Public Libraries and not on tidal. While boats are not readily identifiable, as at pre- Miss Anna Cohen, Passaic, sent, it is-difficult to prosecute chairman of the Information cases of supected theft. Committee of the Passaic County Mental Health Association an- FDr instance, a 25-foot sea skiff is now impounded at the State nounced that plans are currently Marina at Leonardo, because it being developed to have mental has not been identified nor the health exhibits in various pu,blic owner located. The boat was libraries throughout the county. brought to the Marina by marin_ • Public libraries in Pompton Lakes, Clifton and Passaic are police after its operators aban- doned it when they feared appre- planning to have exhibits, the hension for stealing copper wire first one scheduled for Pompton Lakes from November 23 from a barge, moored off shore. through December 5. 'RIVERBOAT'-- DarrenMcGavin (left), as Grey Holden,captain of During the past summer mar- the riverboat Enterprise,and Burr Reynolds,as pilot Ben Frazer, Miss Cohen indicated that many ine patrols and local police offi- co-starin NBC-TV Network'snew full-hourSunday epic narrative persons interested in reviewing of life on the Mississippiin the brawling 1840's. cials along the seashore found mental health literature will have several youths engaged in steal- an opportunity to do so. ing boats and motors for sale The association will make the to an adult "blackmarketeer". following pamphlets avaiable Services performed by New without cost at the various exhi- Jersey's volunteer marine police bRs: Some Things You Should during the past season included Know About Mental Illness; .....•. - •::. : .! the investigation of theft reports What Every Child Needs For ß • ... - •. '.:...... for 126 outboard motors and 38 Good Mental Heauth; For Good

boats. ß Mental Health In Your Communi- ß - -. " ....-'2'::. '•-• Other types of juvenile delin- ty; and Mental Health Is 1, 2, 3. •:'.':.-'.:i:':•:. "..' .....' ..-:::.•.iii::•.+-:: ...... !:' quency occurring on the water- In addition to making pam- ....•. '":.-.:..'...... ::'-'•{•::i•::!{•:i'i •. ways, particularly involving reck- phlets available wit.hout cost, the ß":;•{'::'•:•'•'•:::- .. ":'•i:•.."" :%..- ,i.•.••'...-" .:-.. . ]essb.•at operation,will be r•.øg - Association will donate many co- ::ß:.:: :•'.::' ':;.-... •ß. ':. '• ':•:. ]•.;:?{,•:•...... : j . nized in the pending A-15. • pies-of booklets to the libraries Thirty per cent of the 10 ma- for circulation among their jor b•at accidents in New Jersey readers. These include: You Don't this year involved operators be- Have To Be Perfect, Even If You tween 11 and 18 years of age; 13 Are A Parent; Emotional Prob- per cent more involved operators lems Of Growing Up; How To in the next age bracket of 19 to Deal With Your Tensions; Do -: . ..:::"" • ...... 25; 16 per cent involved operators Cows Have Neurosis; Mental Ill- .. between the ages of 26 to 33; 14 ness, A Guide For-The Family; ...'.. {.-:.?• ß ß•::'i':::i' .. per cent between ages of 34 to and others. " '::.i''--.':'%': .',•i::: 42; 16 per cent between ages of Members of the information 43 to 50; and 11 per cent in the committee responsible for plan- ß over 50 bracket. ning these programs are Mrs. Mark Hanna, l•i.ngwood; Mrs.

Pauline Bograd, Paterson; Mrs. ;..::- Cost Of Living Is Down John Duffy, Clifton and Mrs. Cla- \ rita Potts, Clifton. A Little Additional announcements will Significant in the over-a]] bus•- be forthcoming as the specific ex- ness picture was the revelation hibits are made available to the that the cost of living index had public. Any of these pamphlets dipped nominally afte a four- and others on mental health and month rise. This evidence of at mental illness can be obtained by 'PETERGUNN'--Craig Stevens(left) stars in the title role and least a temporary trend toward contacting the Passaic County LolaAlbright, as torch singer Edie Hart, with HerschelBernardi, as price stability was generally wel- Mental Health Association, 339 PoliceLt. Jacoby,are featuredin the populardetective adventure

comed by businessmen. Broadway, Paterson. series. _ telecast on Mondaynights over the NBC-TV Network.- PageFour THE CHItONICLF_ Gibraltar A Popular animals' have always been/asso- .armed fortress. Today, thanks--i0 C-hemials , Derived. Fro m ciated with Gibraltar and• are -*the determined efforts of local

Tourist. Aftfaction Coal Less Abundaft 'carriedon the rolls of the ß:milita- businessmen, the Rock has been . •'•"S.tandin.g.."-sef•tinel-like at the ry garrison. ß elevated to the well-deserved sta- ß, One result of 't•helong steel •VesternAi•PrOaChes to the Medi- Gi,braltar's Main Street which tus of tourist resort. Strike has been a growing shbrt- .}g.rr•,nean,th'e'•Crown Colony of winds through the town is jam- •Gib•altaris ' provingincreasingly age of' coal chemicals.•.. med with well stocked shops and :•0rthe mostpart,"'::turned out"jin pOPularwi•h •ourists.'Blessed bazaars. Spanish .. pottery, man- Washington,as Commander-i•- •f:•'•a mildand temperate eli- tillas, fans, ivory and curiosities Chief, moved his army across the by-produe•coke.'o-vens-aS:-apr.._e.i •matg and .situated ide•y for ex- from the East, Italian embroid- State. of New Jersey four times liminary 'step in the st.eelmaki•g •j•s•'0ns to neig'•boring Spain ery, Swiss watches, and German duringthe AmericanRevoluti0i•. process. They goøinto'the maki'r/g and MorroCoo,the Rock-is gain- cameras sold wiLhout .øt•x are Within the State's boundaries, of thousands.of products rangin• ing' •'onsiderable'recognition in some of the best buys. three major battles and at least from aspirin'ando•h-er d•rugst0re

.. travel agency tour it•eraries. 'From Gibraltar, frequent flights ß ninety minor engagements were items to mothballs and explo- : .•asily reached by direct Mia- and ferry boat schedules are of- fought. New Jersey is of._en re= m'a•M•.dridservice and a fast con- fered to Tangier across the ferred tO as "The Pathway of the sives.-Also, many kinds:Of paint

n•'iing •fiightof ninety minutes, Straits in Morocco. Algericas, Revolution." and plasticsare based'•ßn•'n__ap_:.h-__ Gibraltar, captivates the visitor Spain, can be reached by car, bus thalene, a coal che"mi.caiwhose even .before he arrives. Every- or ferry boat. A regular limou- production normally is .incidental .'•.ng on the Rock is spectacular sine also links the Rock with a The Meadowlands Regional De- to the making of steel:."._T•js--sub- •p scalefrom the scenery.to shop- number of attractive resorts velopment Agency has been cre- stance and another, benzene, have ping barg•s and the air- along 'the color drenched Andalu- ated by ten municipalities to re- been..rising in 'price_:.and•Sqme:_•n- dustrial uders have ',been' sw•(eh- :•e.•a.•tlanding is no exception. sian coast. claim and develop the 15,000 _ • . --. Wheeling around the bold acres. of tidal marshland in the ing to substitutes d'er'r.•d -fy•.rn mountainouspromontory which In years gone by, many thought _. of Gibraltar .as nothing but an Hagkensack River Valley. petroleum. ._ is Gibraltar, the plane begins a steep turn toward the single run- way •at juts out into the bay.

From your" 'armchair vantage .

. point, it's possible to obtain breathtakingviews o• the harbor, anchored ships and picturesque town w•eh nestles against the slopesoi theRock. ..•.:•eplane touches down and - the•:aetually crossesthe •main )r0a•d to Spain, which intercepts •.runway. Needlessto say,trat- :,tic js halted well in advance o• •e •reratt'&.descent. .•he to•,"whlch •has a civilian p•.oP•latio.noI about 23,•0 is built on•j•the slope •aeing the •y' and lookson to the Spanish •;.• ot Alg•iras. :•:.;Gi.braltar has a number ot ho- tels but perhaps; the most glitter- ing socially is the Rock Hotel perched high about the bay. -M:any ot the rooms have balcon- ies overlooking the harbor and ß ß ... postcard views can be obtain• ..... by. merely opening a window. Gayparties and gatherings are held at•.t•s hotel. • ;..•'•ightSeeingon the Rockis a ,'m•"' of course, and time "•'•5Uldbe taken to visi• Europa Point Lighthouse, situated at the extremeSouth ofthe Colony. The- -• '-•eightof thetower is somel•- :Ieet. a•ve sea level and its light •. i•;visible ]for a distance ol about .' 30 miles.

•'•-",,•...•lageSatalan on the Bay,eastern a small side fishingof the Rock, which is only accessible'by ve•icle th:roughtunnels hewn out •;.•.ff'he mountain during the war, [• has a fine sandy •ach. Here, p•- "•:•:/i•Ularlyfrom May-to October, /•'ViSitors and local residents can •enjoy a swimin the balmyM'•i- terranian.

. •.. ¾•:..•' Another attraction is to visit FOURMEN ON A HORSE-- Ridinghard on areco.stars (from left)_Bobby C•a .wford•:3r, ,..- '•; •e UpperRock and watchthe the trail to the•'NBC-TVNetwork's Western- John Smith, Hoagy •. 'lovable Rock apes at-play. •ese adventure.• series, .Laramie, onTuesday . nights ...... Fuller. The settingis_ •.the ...... wyomingi':Te•rritory...... '___l=_•_• '•- ...... LL..... • ...... • -- . .: -_: .-.,: ..; :.P'age Five

...... --- ""- -: '...... •. • =....•.L..'. ._ -. Pinay Sfabilizing French voted out of office, and assumed the post of Foreign Minister. -Econo,my Then Pinay joined forces with According to Andre Visson in General De Gaulle, as Minister an article in the Readers' Digest, of Finance and Economic Affairs. reporters at Idlewild Airport star- He has fought inflation and ed incredulously at the short, be. fought it to a standstill. His .pro- spectacled man with clipped mus- gram involves austerity and sa- tache and gentle smile, who had The only time some fellers . Yep, there's a lot of billy crifice. Innumerable government ever-•.t on the ball ts at the tlmt don't come rrem the but- landed in May. The man was An- subsidies have been abolished. chershop.ß ß ß toine Pinay, French Minister of Significantly, labor contracts in Now' and then a woman Some kids stm• out with a Finance. He was assuring them which wages are tied to the cost d•.v,erwill know.where she•s play house and end up in a: that he not come to the United of living index also have disap- Boron. work house. States in search for loans or cre- ß ß ß peared. As Mr. Pinay sees it, it Yep. singewe*ve cracked the Who kin remember the oM dits. He told them "Why should is absurb to have the price of atom we've busted our pocket time nickelodian? books. ß ß ß ! .beg for more dollars?. I did not coal, steel and movie tickets de- even have to use the 450 million When a fellers fit up nd termine the price of eggs and Our taxes mike us think go' has •ot up end went, he's made available to us four months that Uncle Sam believes in milk- that merely makes the winner take all ß ß ß ago, when ! announced plans to inflation steamroller roll even Soft words make a fine ira* put our financial house in order." Nothin's as crumby &s a big pression. faster. He stands for tax simplifi- 1oafer. ß ß ß Mr. Pinay had produced some- cation, tax reform, and a balanc- Preventing old age is an ale 'thing of an economic miracle. ed national budget, as the essen- When a deep thinker gits in old problem. Over'his head he's soon •unk. ß ß ß The French Treasury's dollar re- tial conditions for a stable curren- Many a feller who acts like serve, which had steadily declined cy. Some fellers think a lot or a saint* nin*t. themselves when no one else in the past, had shown a sharp The victory over inflation still upward movement. This was con- has to .be consolidated. It will ß ß ß ß trary to the expectation of most prove lasting only if De Gaulle's observers. French prices had been regime succeeds in halting the rising and the franc .weakening new upsurge of prices and the for more than a generation. new wage demands of French Many experts had thought the workers. This implies further sa- French economy impossible, with crifice. But, no sacrifices are too &WEBSTER CLASSIC something resembling national hard, say Pinay, if they are es- bankruptcy a future inevitability. sential to lick inflation. And oth- It appears Mr. Pinay has con- er countries which to a lesser or founded them. greater degree have also felt the Pinay's career has been remark- corrosive grip of inflation, watch able. As manager Of a tannery, with particular interest and his employe relations were excep- with hope Pinay's experiment j.K.GREEN ti'onal. In 1939 he became mayor in France. REALEST^TE of a French city and inaugurated AND all manner of needed municipal According to Nation's Business, improvements without raising the older worker could be one INSURANCE '1 taxes. In 1939 he went to the of the most valuable assets in the Chamber of Deputnes, and was competitive .business world of the one of the first conservatives to 60's. It cites a government sur- be elected from a workers' dis- vey showing that some 45 per trict. He was one of the organiz- cent of manufacturing workers ers of a new Independent Party over 40 years of age produce opposing socialism. In the post- more per man hour than the war era he held posts in four cab- younger men. The older worker inets and in 1952, when France also has some special attributes was in a disastrous financial po- experience, greater dependa- sition, he took 'over the reigns of bility, mature appreciation of job Government. His first objective responsibility. was to stop inflation. To balance the nation's .budget, he cut expen- Bernard Baruch says: "The ditures instead of raising taxes. housewife is the most important q•xe French Treasury took on a person. She holds the world to- healthy 1-ook. Even so, Pinay was gether."

'THOSEWERE THE DAYS By ART BEEMAN

The CHRONICLE ß'•'.,.:•.-".•i•.::'•'..'-•ß:.,..:.:...... "'i::•i•:!!•i"..,.:.:::...::...... -' • ..-..: ::. :.:}•;:.-•:::. •:•:•:•:::'::;•:'•::::::::•:'-'•:•'::•:•'."'-'-::.•"-•:•:-: '-. ß.-.-...:.-.-.:::...-. ' :.¾-..--.:.:-•.-:-:. ß 4 ..... -':"';i;.;':•:{i::i?:ii:..'..•ii½!i::::.:-:•Jl...... :.. :.:,::::.....:..%.....:.... •i•:.-:.:.:::%•?•::-.:.:..:.::.:.:½ SOCIAL 'F:,':!::-'.'-}?g::'."{:..•:::i-.:•:i."":F::::i::•-':!:- - -i:' :';•j!:i::i•..':'•:.?.::.•:•,'?- ...... '. "-'-:-:':x.--':.... ::::::::::::::::::::: ...... :.s..-..,.•.•.,•:...c. ::•:•;?:.':½p;...... ::"-•.::-•.* !-*!'i::. ßß ...... •, -;.:.::.'...... ß...... :,•.'::•.-• ß . :•:•::•. :•..:..:':'..-- .. '..;•: ,:...... •..,...;•{::.:•::{::..i:{.•- - ß. ,• :• ....{• :½: - :..,.!::.... .(-! :•. . .:..:;..:..•'•.- '¾: .:.::.. :...... "• . By PAT :"* '•'-/:-:. - .. i•-':'".•:::: :::; ...... : .- ./' -:.'.•:i:-""•:: ..4:. ..:..:.'; "•.. -.. .,x ..,::•.:.:.:...,,...... •.:. .x... : ,• . -.... . ---..::..::P•:'•:...x.•:½ ::.:,....-, ß .s::!'ßi:.:.•?::::'":--•:i:..-:::?:.-.•-::: •...... ':::'"":"'•;.,..: •':%•--'%. ....<:".: ' R,.-,:.• '.'.-:•..:•-,-:'!:. :-;:i.. :.:. ," .i :.-.... .• !.: -:•::.•:i::.'.:..-::::•. :::..;.•;.•:•!:::..•:':•.•.:• •.•..-;;:.•::-..: The Paterson Lyric Opera Theatre will present its secondperform- ance of the 1959-60 subscription season on Saturday, November 21 at .?.:.½:',:.½....-....-: ...... :.,...:•,.-::.::-..-.....: •:....' ß •..:?.•.::..... :?;;-'-.... .½:- . "--.-:-:½...... }::::::..%•:::½..::--.:.. 8:15 o'clock in the auditorium of School.' 26. The program will be a i -•.':.:::":'.<...... :- ':?-':.:... ':' {.,.. ":.•...... %--..i½',. ' .... ß ß ß "-{i: ß ....'. ....:i::...... '}%..:?':.:',:...... • :...... '"..E:i"-•{•::i•:"•:•:• ::.Y..'-."'-'-'.-•r-- ...... ;. . ß ' ...... ø:.' ".... ß ß popularrequest gala "Bellini-VerdiNight", featuring highlightsof the : . ..-.:!..:-!::-;.'..•: .. •,...'.,.-./..-:.:.•:' ....•.::::i-•: :• '- ' ::' ' ß ß' ß "'::.. :: ;:-• .. :::-.:':.• ....::½2 -•:' +.::":'• .• ß - . company'sinaugural 1958-59season. These will include Act II of Bel- . ß.•.;,.-:•.•-:::.•.•., .½. $...,•:: :.--..• .,:-•,{.•...,;..Y. :-...... ::::½.-.-.-..- .::...... ß . . •...... ]ini's Operas "I Puritani" and "Norma", Act II of Verdi's "l•igoletto." -- e!:•":'•.- ß• ...... -.-.•..:. :+,.'.::•.-.•r..:½.':..... - • .. ::-:'::..-::•':.•i.... • '•.• .....:i•. • "' .'..•:..".-.!! :- •' ' ß and Act IV of Verdi's "Otello." Appearing as the tragic Desdemona ß.: :' .•:•"•....•E ... '¾.- . '.'-'/:"•' .:•.::::2.-&':•x:•{•..-: .S::.•.,•...... ::- :. ::.' . '..:"2 ..... ß . ' .:.' • ...... i.-.::.- \ ,,.-:-•:•.::•i"-.:...... -•...• .:½'., ....: :. • '...... ß .• .;.:..... ß in Verdi's "Ote]]o" will be Eleanora Triggiani of Paterson. In the ..: ... ..'-•. :,.:!i •- ' •::i...... &-•..•½-"...:: ..:i::.:,:.... '- '.::" .: '-"...'"-'.-"-: ß :' :...... '• ';;..... :!•.: + ^...... •,' .' ....•.i-•{;?4{•:i::: • ;;;..••...... ;. : ß .. .':. ' ':.;.• ..•..... - portrayal of Ote]lo will be Louis Bisio also of Paterson. • . '::, .: . ..:::.•::"•;•- ... '; ...... :.. :. .-. ..•,.. :'ß• .•: .1,•....-.'. '.ß . ,:--. •,•, :'• ß :: ß .x,.,'-'.•.:'" ...s:, '"' .•..x' . .-.' -$::•.::-x,-.-.., ;-&.•:.•,•-•.... , S:•....•. ß ' ß i:..... ' ' .•.•;.&l:::&"•;':!}-1'~' ,•,•' (-• -;::•{:-.-:•:'i•:-'e;'.'.... •--'.. '"';.. ;...... -...";;'-. ::..-' '.,:;.•:.•.:•".:....•-•... {-: .•-.,.•r.:::.-'.:-•".½.::- • ...- -.-..... i ' ...... ß Mrs Anna C. Martin of Totowa Borough, was honored at her .':'.':1':....., •--"•*' '"'":'"•;"•:...... :': ",3 ' :' ':i..... ;..:.... .'-:..", , 75th birthday at a surprise party on Monday. Her daughter, Miss Mae Martin and Mrs. George Luzzi arranged the party. •: .+ "i::' .:.-.i:::%...'.'.•:i,;:i:.-.;:,::,;:P' ...... !. -' •.•{:.:.•i.:.::i•i::'.'-:•i ... :.::...... -::::'.-L.!. • •.% ß ... ß ...... %...:;....': ...... ;7..3 .k•...... r:' :P:i...... '! The Barnert Temple Brotherhood will hold its annual forum dinner on Tuesday evening, November 10, at Fellerman Hall, at 6:30 '- YOU BET YOUR LIFE'--Groucho (with cigar) o'clock. The g•est speaker will be Dr. David Goodman. He will talk and GeorgeFenneman return with the former's high-ratedcomedy quiz programfor anotheryear on the NBC-TV Network, Thursday on "What Are. We..Giving Our Children Spiritually. The address will nightsand on the NBC RadioNetwork Monday. nights. Groucho•s be followed by a questionand answer period. quipsand quizzesand George's.scorekeepinghave highlightedthe series on TV for nine years and on radio for 13.

On November 10, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron L. Van Der Stad plan to celebrate their' twenty-fifth wedding anniversary with an open house and buffet supper for relatives and friends at the. Prospect Park Firehouse on Fairview Avenue. Mrs. Van Der Stad is the former Miss Kittie Koningswood. They were. married on November 10, 1934 in the ' Second Reformed Church of Paterson by,the late Rev. Henry Sluyter.

The announcement of the engagement of Miss Beverly Mathews, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Mathews of Clifton, t(• Albert Myles Stanton III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Stanton ol• Upper Montclair. ... Th0 (;oup]e was honored a family party. The wedding arrangement

.. have not been completed. ?.,.:. ß , .:.,: ß...... -+. 4.: - ::i' - ':•'..•, :-. . .,. - ii.%"-:' '"' .. ß • ,..: .%.::"'{' ::' ':' A program of choral and instrumental music will •be presented ,..•, .- • , ' : ' ...,,•.•,.•.'•{ ..' by the senior choir of the Central Reformed Church on Thursday : '-• .,.•: - •:: 4• ß evening, November 12 at 8:15 o'clock. The program will be held in the .,ß .-. ,.,'-•-. -. '"...• .:•',.-. ßc . •-" :..- . ....•'•, ..

The CHRONICLE Page Seven EDITORIALS THRT'S n FR[T HERE'S NEWS eO.•:.•vu•5 ff•:•o$ARE J•'TI•R

THE.--.tSSUE-__ OF 1960 WA•. HIKER I•REST • NEW •0•... • I•REST •• • •ES... A' high standard-of living based on a productive pri- •D •E •IL•E • •• vate"• . :tmm•amycannot permanentlyexist in a country •ERIE• E • • •• •E•ND dedicated to a program of inflation. Multi-billion dollar • •E BEST • • EVER •D IN budgetsbecame commonplace during World War II, and in the years-since, spending has gone on at a stupendous rate, as though a dollar were, indeed, hardly worth the paper it is printed on.' It may in fact become worth just that, in the vi .ew-of•nany experts, unless we as a nation face up to the-fact •hat the public purse, even when re- plenishecl_•ith tax-an• debt dollars, is nearly empty. The warn'mg signs are up. The U.S. Treasury is pay- ing five per cent to borrow .short term money. Whatever •s •foundation,-•ve are considered now to 'be in a period HELP Of boom prosperity. Yet, there is scant prospect of balanc- HELP• •...•A)Nri:IY•D• HELP ing the Federal budget of some $79 billion. That's plain •:::>U•ELI: V• • go•. NEW:.•_J•tE• E •P H •DS •V evidence •that Congress has lost any coordinated control

.

.of t•g, debt, and spendingpolicy. The outlook for any ß

period_o 0f recession when tax receipts fall and .political -pr•re for further spen-di_r•gis greater, is frightening. These are •the conditions.--Yetkl960 is an election year, and already many politicia• of every political stripe and party .rank:•re •eating the bushes from one end of the land .t-o•the_x•th•-with promises of ever greater public spending. ' "Thatkind•"of a politicianis dangerouslybehind the times and it is urgently important that the people demon- strate their knowledgeof that fact at the next opportuni- ty, on election day. Upon such action will depend our chance of remaining free citizens of a strong and solvent nation. Campaign It takes a lot of different peopleto make a world. There are still oratory to the side, that is the overriding domestic issue 6f' 1960', manywho think that peoplewho show a greatdeal of promiseand. abilitycan be spottedvery early in life. They feel that if a kid-gets goodgrades in schooland if IQ testsshow fairly good,rates that that youngsterswill set the•wørldon fire. Of course,a greatdeal de./•endson how eacho• us measuressuccess and what we-setstore by as the mark--of an outstandingman,or woman. WAS 'LENIN RIGHT? Youngsterswho show early promise in schooland who do well on Reports from Washington have lately given' the coun- IQ t•stsmay develop into business geniuses Or may become promi- nent and successfulin other fields of endeavor.•ut this is not always try an indication of how seriously the Administration necessar/lyt.he case.All •; us haveat sometime or otherread or . views the fiscal problem. That problem, it is clear, is heardthe.story of ThomasEdison arid how poor a scholarhe was.As second in the President's mind only to the problem of a matter,of fact, Edisonwas considereda dunce.Yet .he achieved avoiding a third world war. heightsthat few men ever reached'. This kind of duncewe would all And the President and his advisors are not alone in like io be. ., this. All manner of qualified peOPle,in and out of the gov- .HenryFord II washedout of hisclass"and course in engineering ernment, are convincedthat unless governmentspend- at yale and neverdid anythingscholastically afterward and yet he, ing can be curbed, the budget balanced, and inflation wasconsidered one of the shrewdestin'dustrial statesmen in America. C__h_'eeked,we may be heading for a disaster that could A betterthan averageintelligence is a helpfulasset, yet too much .destray us as a nation, and leave the free world, which intelligencecan actuallybecome ia handicap.to peoplewho want to 'dePer/dsso largely on American strength for survival, becomeleaders. Brilliant-pe0pl'•-more often than'not finc•it hard to Wide OPento communism. The Kremlin would win the ulti- get peopleto followthem in whateverproject they are interested :maieviet6ry-Without firing a shot. in. Sometimesbrilliant scholarsltavd:bed'n driven or forcedto apply -•'his,-infact, is whatLenin, architect of Sovieteom- themselves'to learningsimply becausethey were sociallyclumsy.

munism• 'expected.._ Long ago, he wrote that capitalism By_all meanssee•'ti•t:;Y•our yqungsters apply a littlenight oil in would destroy itself from within. What government does study.But if ..they:don;'t •ave IQ's of 159,please don't spend the rest to "/th•people's money and savings veill determine whether o.fyour life-mourning..-He'.may developinto a magnateor tycoon he was right-or wrong.' in spite of everythin,g.

pag'eEight The CIt1•ONICLE •' OVer 28 Million Dollars called "offset" provision in the TheRussia;n. debt owed to thi• Estimatessay_ that grainstor,ij old law. Disabilitybenefits-under country,:-according to Paul Her- age space in Kansas, top wheat Piid' Monfhly By S.S. social security are. now payable fernan, Writing in the New York productionstate, has trebled in 'a ßAs of February 195•, old age, in full even though •benefits are Times, includes' World War 'I decade to 745 million bushels, ac- survivors, ,and disability insur- also payable under State work- $563. million; Kerensky Regime cording to Nation'S Agriculture. ance monthly benefits were be- men's compensation or under 190 million; Lend-Lease .Worl,d Last year one.elevator operation.-' ing paid ifi the area servicedby some other Federal Governm.ent War 11, $11,,260,343,000; World received nearly $15 million for the Paterson district office at the program. War I public loans sold to private storing surplus wheat .and other, The types and amounts being. AmeriCan investors $75 million. grains. rate of $2,530,516. a year, accord- ing to Stanley J. Fioresi, mana- paid in the area. serviced by the ger of the Paterson social secur- Paterson office. are as follows, .ity district office. This is an in- as of February '28, 1959, the date crease of about nine .per cent 0f the latest available tabulation: over-last year. 20,251 retired workers, $1,601,- FioresL-s•essed---that-while', the' '-903; '5,225-wife-or husband; $225,- 'benefits are intended primarily 239; 5,572 widow or widower, for the beneficiary's economic se- $264,488; 3.894 Mothers, Children ;curRy, the payment of social and Dependent Parents, $222,644: .eurity benefits at the rate of $28,- •0.516 a year in the Paterson Utility Companies' Rates •.rea helps ,business in the com- munity generallybecause most of Controlled the money is spent immediately A good many People, appar- •n food, clothing, and other ne- ently, don't know that the utility co.mpanies of the nation are pub- cessities.. In February social se- "'curity benefits were being paid licly regulated -- and a good •nationally at a rate of nearly 10 many more have .no precise'idea --billion dollars annually. of how regulation works. .? Payments to a retired worker That inference comes from a wit h no depen.dents receiving be- survey coriducted among the cus- nefits averaged $67.50 a month tomers of big western gas and •,.:.;.•." ..:-.":• "nationallyin February, and to a electric company. When the cus- ß•"i •..::.••?--•' :'.• .. retired couple $119.40 a month. tomers were asked whether they x•:.:?.:•.-.: . ?,..42. .

:Theß average_for a .widow with thought the rate were regulated, I '•.... •.•.•. :•..•

ß two young children was $165. The one out of three said "no". ß . ß maximum payment for a family The law provides that the reg- f. ' " ..... , -.•s $254. There were several rea- ulatory commission establish ' . ß ;v•w;,•v,.-.,.o,0,. +'J•.-.v...-.,•..•.•.•,• •, •...•.•.-••.• .• •...•.• sons for the increase in benefiei- rates that are fair to both users arise over last year. The long- and shareholders. If the commis- THE OLD SOFT SHOE --Guest stars Donald O'Connorand Carol •erm growth of the aged popula- sion believes rates are too high, Lawrence t•ip the light fantastic with host Gene Kelly .(right): on it institutes a proceeding to de- the Saturday, Nov. 21, soecial colorcastof "The Gene Kelly Show" -tion'and of the proportion of the on the NBC-TV Network...... •:7 .... ßaged population eligible for be- termine the just and reasonable ...... nefits are important factors in rates. It, on the other hand, the the continuing increase in the company believes that the rates number of 'beneficiaries. Other are too low it must go to the reasons for the increase of bene. commission, and receive authori- fieiaries are found in the provi- zation before it can make any in- ß . :...... ;..& .-,:.: % .:':- •.-•. ,-..?.•,-.:• sions of the 1958 Amendments to crease. Public hearings are held ...... , '•':.•:" :-- ..::-•:;:::::?*:"'•{'::':"*::""**:'•:'*' ....¾,:.L::d}:..... :::.. *: '• ....5: the Social Security Act 'which at which all relevant evidence, •.-:. ::}...... •...... ß .... •:,..:• ow make it possible for the pro and con, is carefully evalu- '- .. . .• .•.•_. • • ..z.' ".:•'" :" ' * •'"•'•. "•::.i : . ' .... :P'.-.. '.! .x•:..•.:- "i . •-ß , rate, 'dependent husband, and ated. In all instances the burden ...'!.:i :::'"t:...... •..S-.. '-.:•, ß:•;-:-('•.'-' ' '- ": "'"-....-' .. .!'.: ':..':-;fl-*.•.... :'...:.. . -¾..z.'-.' .' '•;.:•:'::$-'*."-%:;-.-.• i::' . 'W' ß '... . ¾' : -- .children of a disabled-worker be- of proof is on the company. It ßil -,:.'- ' • ::'":.ß ':•:"';':'!:'" 's:•.. .<•- ":•'.-' '.:-•:.....•,•; • •xi .:'-.•'.. ..:..'i.'.•.?.i ß ,X-- "•,' ß•' '.:.:'.": neficiary to receive monthly .pay-. must make a compelling case, or -.'ß '.-'--• "' - ß-' *•x"•.•,• .'¾ ••e•.', -".:'.. -?:. .... ::::•;•.%•.. . ß ß - '•. -:'.- ½-.*. -:'k;'...:.: .:.?...':' ' -..' - -.•-...'.•• .•-•:•"..'' ments. These amendments also be refused the increase. , .--: -' .... "... '"':"' ...... ; "".'{;->' provide for benefits to aged de• .. ':•..'.,:'--::•::!:.,...... :::: .' .. . 4'-.•-• ...... •R-.:½.w•.•....}'•.-:'-' • .x"•:..'-:-"•"'"."i ' :pendent parents of a deceased Surplus Of Heating 0il "-•.•.. ' ::'.-•.....' ...... **, '- '.':e:.":.'"'.: .:-}i?• :::.... •½...... worker 'even though other survi- t - .: ß : -, '•il'.•.- . :- •..- 4;•:'•:•'::• i. -'..•,, May Lower Price ..-'-•::';."*C*.:' ...... :•,"•.... •,.,:'%.-:'.' .... '.-.... ' .... :-;?•.'-"f' Vors are entitled to payments. ß .x-:..... [ ' "c•?: ;. .:-?' ' 44•' :':- :" ' *x :--.:.'' ' .-• Moreover, Fioresi pointed out, U.S. householders may find •...• .:.},: .•- ] "...... :,.-.::.. ,:,.. . --:-.:-::.:1:-.[.q:. •-.:¾. their bills for heating oil a little . ' ß ': :::::;-:""':*'.:,'!; .... '"' .: 'it is noweasier for . a. disabled lower this winter. Leaders in the ". •. •, ,,'.•. : ."' ,.-.•'•' ."':--:.-.: .-.< -":'. ß. :•'{i..::•':-I ..-':. 'f" :.':.i... ' ::•..•..-:•..:,:'•.....- '?::":.{.,...::. 'Worker to quality for benefit .I •' " :" .-'.:--- '" . -4 '-." ..: ß- ..... -' .•..... •,<''/'-• petroleum indristry say that fuel ':?...... •,- -•-• .."• ":... 5 .:: '.:. '.'"':...."• ..... payments. He no longer needs so- :.'*-"-.,•. "'•, "l':."-•.. '...... " ..-'"- ! :•..•:-.•--::.i:¾,' ..... ,, x •"':'.... •-b.' .- ..' i - :,": -... .: ,•::-,&:-.."•....:'".-: cial security credit for one and oil inventories, at more than 168 :•;... ,• , . :.-. .:. ß .:.%- :..:.•.¾.:.... -one-halt'years of work in the last million barrels, are "too h. gh". .. -"•?*'•".'e..'•. ,,,...• .,•.• 4,... ': .. .:,. " '.... '" "": -- 'i!••½,;-.: .. ' Stocks are 22 'million '.barrels . ::.!' .-..:-- '% '-: -'•hree years before he ,became dis- ß . .. .. abled. If he worked under social greater than at this time last i• ::!:' '" "' /security for at least five years year. They could dwindle fast, out of the ten before be became however, under the impact of a . disabled he may be eligi,ble for cold winter. .. disability benefits. ß % .•...... •..• c•.. .;. • .. Increases in average benefit There are o.n estimated 24,830 ?ayments reflect the seven per farms in the Garden State. New THEBIG FOUR -- A quartetof the entertainmentworld's mosl• 2ent raise in benefit amounts Jersey ranks first in the nation celebrated comedians- from left, George Jessel, George Burns• .-which become effective with the ßEddie Cantor and Jack Benny- share the same bill for the first in farm income per acre and the •cime'in their long and hilarious careers in George Burns in-The cheeks for January 1959. Average total income from farm products 'iBigTime," the Startime colorcastspecial for Tuesday,No v. 17. disability benefit payments also in the state annually is approxi- .Key moments in the careers of each will be recalled during the ' 60-minute salute to vaudeville's comic stage. •refieet the elimination of the so- mately $400,000,000. ß

•e CHRO NI CLE Page Nine -•*'-'- Borg-Warner Company Taxes Going Up In All Food Convenience Adds Tells Its Story Areas Of The Hafton To Cost The behind-the-scenes opera- Tax Foundation reports that The criticism of the "spread" tions of big business corporations more major tax changes, 111 in in what the farmer gets for food often have a dramatic vigor riva-1 number, have been made by the and what the consumer pays is ing anything in fiction. This is states which hel.d legislative ses- often discussed. As years go. on reflected in the story of the mam- sions this year than in any year the "spread" seems to increase. moth Borg-Warner company and in postwar history. THE GOOD OLE' U.S.A. Without the "spread" our its ,board chairman, Roy C. Inger- Need]ess to say, the great ma- While commenting on the interna- steak would be standing in Iowa soll. Will Ourslet relates this dy- jority of the changes- 87- in- tional political mud-slinging these corn fields; our cranberry sauce namic tale in "From Ox Carts to volved tax increases. An addition- past months,a friend of ours back would be in a bog on Cape Cod; Jets" . al 12 involved the imposition of from occupation duty in Germany our citrus juice would be on trees Borg-Warner initially represent- new taxes. There were, by way thoughtthis stor• would give us pause in Florida or Ca..ifornia. The ed a 1928 merger of four automo- of contrast, just five tax reduc- to be a bit happier we're in the States spread covers the cost of getting tive parts manufacturers. Inger- tions and just one repeal of a tax. despite the victor. the food from the farm and put- The tax increases ran a con- soll brought his family's small, ting it in the condition the house- bustling steel business into the siderable gamut corporate and •vife wants, and then transport- fold only a year later. Now more personal income, general sales, ing it to the stores. than filly Borg-Warner plants gasoline, tobacco and liquor.

It is said by some that a few. . stretch across the world, with the Looking at the matter money- ,_ . years ag'o it took five and a ha•. company aiming for a billion dol- wise, the Foundation says that hours of work in the kitchen to. lars a year in business. governors in 31 states proposed prepare meals for a family of ,Ourslet relates many anecdotes tax increases totaling almost $1.5 four. With the convenient way in about the colorful incidents and billion in their messages to 1959 which food is prepared today the people who were part of Borg- legislatures. work can be done in one-and a Warner's struggle up to major Well, so much for the facts. half hours. status. Included is the story of The question now is what are Seemsthr• prisonersin a Russian It runs into considerable money- the special cab'_e which played a the American people, who ulti- •ork •mp we• talking: to process foods which in many .key role in the Battle of Britain; mately have the last word, go- The fi•t asked, "Why a• you hereF' cases are ready to eat, and this a courtroom fray for patent ing to do about it? His co-pri•ner •eplied, "I was for one of the reasons for the spread rights with millions of dollars at Slansky.Why are you here•" The in cost. stake; and the incredibly speedy The gasoline tax, state and fed- •id, "I was a•inst Slansky." They assembly of war-time amphibious eral, is almost five times as great then turned w the third and askS, craft from parts dropped on the as the tax on diamonds or mink "Why are you hereF' He conf•s•, Pat Boone Book Well '-" 'Tin Slansky." plant grounds by parachute. coats. On a nation wide aver- Received age, it amounts to 47 .per cent, "'Twixt Twelve and Twenty,".• New Jersey has one of the high- and exceeds 50 per cent of the re- written by teen-age idol Pat est average per family net buy- tail gasoline price in 20 states. Mrs. Newlywed:"Norval, my dear, I Boone and published by Prentice- ing incomes in the nation at Total estimated take in 1960: $5,- knowsomething is troublingyou; and Hall, is fast becoming one of the $6,791. 439,000,000. I wantyou to tell me whatit is. Your worries are our worries now." most phenomenal .best-sellers of • ß Mr. Newl)•ved:"Well, dear,we've just recent years. had a letter from a girl in Boston;and More than 240,000 copies have she'ssuing us for breachof promise." been sold in the first ten months of 1959. Published in late Novem-

ACROSS 22. Seeded ber, 1958, it sold approximately 28. Musical drama 1o 187,000 copies in the last five Space 25. Leave out Answer to 4. Clutch 26. TiUed 9. SrnaU bed weeks of the year, which made it 27. Boxes 12. Penoct o! time 29. Ocean, action Cross Word the number two non-fiction best• 18. 83. Female heir 14. seller for 1958. Total copies 15. 17. To 87. Kinds of guns Puzzle in print approachthe half millire, 19.. Attire 40. Slow moving creature mark. 21. Spring month •2. Perfo• by 45• Intended on Page 15 Protestant church leaders of all 46. 12 raonth• Detdly dru 47. Method denominations have enthusiastic-• Un• 48. Fro, t Scott• ally endorsed the book. It has 49. ,an's nickn• !80. Short :31. Us 61. L•rnprey also .been acclaimed by parent,% 52. Btam Glowtar 55. Toward Missionary:"Why do you look at me and teen-agers themselves who so intentlyF' recognize the value of its: Pr•p•,• for publication Cannibal: "I am the food inspector." straightforward advice and frank • 89. Empioytr •41. Flekt flowers discussion as an antidote to the threat of juvenile delinquency. ;44. Distau• •45. ',47. Unfresh Not as difficult THE-Missus•,-...... •.. • !iigh card Keit•h Funston, president of the l•vii New York Stock Exchange, says {•. 167. Affirm•tive word .•',.. - , that continuation of U.S. econo- Grunt •59. Cunning mic progress along with the rise .. in shareownership could lift the Exchange's daily average trading - 1. Precious atone ' 'ø• ': 2.-Par• of to I• volume to some 4,500,000 shares 8. Oar 4. Adheres by t.h• mid-60s.The post-warav- •. Battern 6. By erage has been around 1,700,00•.• ?. Place shares. He adds that he is no• 8. ,Vow 9. Coloring pencil making predictions, but tha• the-. '10. Belonging to us '.11.Spread to dry figures represent possibilities to 16. Presses 18. Had been "Sam stoppedlooking at television be considered as the idea of a 20. From Spain agesago, but hestill loves to turnoff "People's Capitalism" becomes the commcrdals." ' more widespread.

Page Ten The CHRONICLE 9:30 2:30 7--World of T•-Ient 2--Have Gun Will Travel S--Mystery Is My Business9--Movie 4---Five Fingers 1 I--Mark Saber I 1:00 I I--Soldiers of Fortune 13--Movie 2---Sun. News Special 10:00 4---News 2-- 3:00 7--Movie WCBS-•--2 WI•A-TV..-4 WAB•5 7--Jubilee USA S--Movie I I--Mama I I--Champ.Wrestling 7--OpenHearing 13•Movie WA.BC-TV--; WOILTV--9 WPIX--11 9--Movie W•TA--13 10:30 I I--Inner Sanctum 11:15 These TV Morning' •nd ' ;•, ,. PrmWrmns Ar• Repainted 2--Markham 13--k4ovie 2•ldov;e 4---it Could Be You 3:30 Mond• '•ttWit Friday frm• 7:00 &.m. to 5:30 p.• 7--Sea Hunt 2•ldovie 1:30 7:00 12:00 7--Gale Storm 9•Bowllng 7--ChampionshipBridge I I--Moyle 9•Movie Late Show 2--News 2--Love of Life 3:00- 13--Play of the Week It--Dangerous 'Assignment

ß 4•Today 4---Truth or Cofisequences ß 2•Millionaire I 1:0Q 13•ldovle 7--Restless Gun 4--Young Dr. Malon• MONDAY 8:00' 13•Carfoons S--So This Is Hollywood 2--News 4:00 2--News 4•Set. NightNews 4•NBC Opera ?--Beet The Clock NOVEMBER 9 7--Uttle Rascals 12:30 9--Strange StOries S•ldovie 7--Paul Wincheli 2--Search For Tomorrow 7--Movie I I--Captured 3:30 13--Movie 8:30 4--It Could Be You 2--The Verdi• Is Yours I I':IS 4:30 5:30 S--Sandy Becker S•Carteons 4--From Those Roots 2--Early Show 7--•Time for Fun 7--Love That Bob 2--Mcwle 2--N. Y. Forum S--R•ck, Squad 4--Movie 4 9:00 12:4• 4--Movie Four 7---BrokenArrow 7--Rin Tin Tin 7--Who Do. You Trust I 1:30 9---Idovie 2--PeoplesChoice 2--TheGuiding Light 9--Movie 9---Idovie 4--Hi More 1:00 5•Movie I I--Whistler I.3•Curtain Time I I•Three Stooges 7--Beulah 2•News 9--Nightmare S:0Q 13--Ask The •mera 4:00 2--Conques'} 10:00 4---Dr.Joyce Brothers 2--Brighter 'Day . 1:00 S•Shodock Holmes '2--MorningPlayhouse 5•Carfoons 2•Late, LateShaw 7--Mafty'sFun Day 4•House on High St. S•..•B•oons 7--American Bandstand I I--Ca-f. Grief '.4.DoughReMi 7--MusicBingo 7•Little Rascals S--Movie 13--Moyle 13--R•chard Willis $ U N D A Y t3--•o.,i. I I--Popeye 7--MemoryLane 2•As The World1:30 Turn• 4:1S 5:30 2•. E. Coil. Bowl 13---3. Fred Muggs 10:30 4--Dial 4 2--The Secret S•orm NOVEMBER8 S---Mr.District Attorney 2--On the Go 7--Ray Milland 4:30 6:30 4--Treasure Hunt 9--Drama 2--The Edge of Night 8:00 7•Lone Ranger 4--News, Gabe Pressman 4---$pllt Per•nality 2--Susie I I--Fast Guns S•Sandy Becker I 1:00 I i--Growingin Spanish 4•Educ. Film 13--Moyle 2--Women 2:00 5---Mr. District Attorney 7--Newsreels 13•Junior Town 7.•Cartoons 6:04) 4•-,The Price Is Right 2--ForBetter or Worse 9:00 2--Small World I I--Superman 7--R0menceof Life 4•QueenFor A Day 13--Rate the Records S:00 2--Peopl-esChoice 4--MeetThe Press •13--DingOong School 9--Moyle7--Day In Coud 2--Life of R•!ey 4--Educ. Film 5--Drama 6:45 I 1:30 13--Movie 4--•Movie •---Wonderama 7--Baseball 4--Huntley, Brinkley 4•Concentration 2:30 5---Allen Freed 9:30 9--Bowling .•Romper Room 2--HouseParty 9--Lost City 2--WayTo Go I I•asey Jones 7:00 .•:•1 Married Joan 4•Thin Man II--Bozo the Clown 2--News 4•Sun.Spec. 13--Movie6:30 4--Shefaun Slade 7--Focus 2--20thCentury S•Charlie Chan I !--Bowling's Best 5:30 10:00 4--Saberof London 5 A TUR DAY •:0o 2--Movie 2--LampUnf• My Feet I I--BraveS•all;on 7--Rescue 2--News 5--My_starr 7--FaithFor Today 13--Newsbeat 9--Terryteen Circus NOVEMBER 7 4--Football 9--Movie 13--Movie 7:00 I I--News 7:00 S--Movie 6:00 10:30 2--Lassie 13--HighwayPatrol 9--Champ. Bowling 4--Modern Farmer I I--Notre DameFootball 2--Look Up And Live 4---Riverboat 7:15 8:00 7--West Point 4•Direct Line 7---Colt 45 I l--Jeff's Collie 2---News 2--Capt, Kangaroo 1:30 7--This Is the Answer 9--Terryteens I I--News 4--Andy's Gang 2--Eye On N.Y. 13--Rate The Records I I:0g 13--Between The Lines 6:30 7•artoon Festival 7--Movie 2--UN In Action 7:30 ,7:30 5--Cartoons 9:00 9---Movie 4--Searchlight 2--Dennisthe Menace 2--MasqueradeParty 2•Capt.Jet 13--Movie 4•olf 7--Men-of Annapolis 5--Metro. Probe 4•Richard Diamond 7--Annlb Oakley I I --Christephors 7--Maverick S•--AfricanPatrol 3•Jus',• For Fun 2:00 I I--Sergeant Preston .:• I 1:30 9--Movie 7--Shlrle¾Temple 9:30 2---Movie 7:00 2•amera 3 I I--VictoryAt Sea 9--Moyle •-Roy Rogers 2--Bold Venture 4--•r. Wizard 1'3--RobinHood I I--It's A Great Life I0:00 I I •'Møvie •J•d.ge Roy Bean 7--AnnieOakley 8:00 13--Newsbeat ß 2--Heckle & Jackie 13--Moyle 7--U. S. Border Patrol I I--Bowllng'sBed 2--EdSullivan 4•Sun. Showcase 4•Howdv Doody 9--Terryteen Circus 12:00 5--PaulCoates 8:00 •--Movie 2:30 I I--Steve Donevan 2•ur Miss Brooks 2--Texan I.I---Wrestlinq ß..7•Osw•ld Rabbit 2--Movie 13--Bishop Sheen 4•Love and Marriage 4--BriefingSession 13--Ladlesof the Press •Dial 999 .•i 10.:30 7--Hawkeye 7:30 7•John Hopkins 8:30 I I--Intern. Defective. 2--MightyMc•use 9--Moyle 2--Jack Benny 9---OralRoborb •--S•11o:of Fortune •_4--Ruffand Ready I I--MoYle 4--Bonanza 13--Playof'the Week 13--Amer.Legend 7•awman 8:30 •iS--LearnTo Draw 3:00 S---Waterfront 12:30 13--MaxLerner 13•w-bo¾ G Men 2--Movie 2--FatherKnows 'Best ' 7--Harbor Command 7--Dick Clark 2--FaceThe Nation 9:00 4•Youth Forum 4---Bob-Hope I 1:00 9--Movie 9--Moyle I I--Boots and Saddle 9--'rhe.Evangel Hour 2--GETheatre S--Divorce Hearing 2---I LoveLucy I I--Moyle 4•Chevy Show 7---Bourbon St. Beat 13--Newsbeat 4---Fury 3:30 I I--Wondersofthe Wor!d S--Follow That Man I !--Kingdom-ofthe Sea 7--Great Glidersleeve 7-Movie 13--Gov.Maynet 7--Rebel 9:00 •9--Playtime 13--M.ovieAdveture •c--Big Beat 1:00 _.13--New Horizons 2•hristian Science I I--Meet McGrraw 2--Da•,•'! Thomas 4:00 7--High Road• 5--1•ovie I I--Football 4•Open Mind 13--A!ex In Wonderland 9•Sc|ence fiction Theatre ß• 11'.30 2--GardenState Stakes 13•al A!ai 5---Movie 9:30 2--LoneRanger 4•Football 7•11. News Conf. 2--Alfred Hitchcock I I--Sil•n'•' Service - •-4---Circus Boy' 5•Mysfery 8:30 7--Magic Eye 7--Movie 2--Western Movie 9•hristian Science S---Assgn Foreign Lecjion 9:30 13--Physical'Culture I I--Mov;e 4---Man and the Challenge I I•onfinental Mina. 7•Alaskans 2--DuPon'•' Show 7--Leave It To Beaver 13--Movie 11--26 Men 4--(•oodyear Theatre 12:00 4:30 I!--I Search For Adv. !:30 13--Face to Face 7--Adv. in Paradise •2--SkyKing 2--Susie 4•Religlous Prog. I 0:00 9--Crusader 4--True Story 9:00 7--Movie 2--C•e.orge Gobel I I--Thls Man Dawson 1t---SoupySales 5--Movie 2--Mr. Lucky 9--Movie- 4•Loretta Young •9--Movie 9--Movie 4•Deputy I I--Notre Dame Football 5---Hy Gardener 10.00 J!--Guy Lombardo 13--Movie 5•Roller Derby 13--Movie 9--Movie 4•Steve Allen • 12:30 5:00 7--Lawrence Walk Show 2:00 ! I--Divorce Court S--Walter Winchell 2--Mackenzie's Raiders 2--Life of Riley 9--Movie 4•Pro Basketball 13--Open End 9--Strange Stories 4•Detective Story 7--All Star (•olf I I•ify Detective 7--Movie 10:30 I I--Drama • 7--Football 13--Dance Party I I--Football 2--What's My Line? 13--Full Coverage

The CHRONICLE Page Eleven 10:30 10:30 1.0:00 !•-Idan,hun:. 4•Mike Hamme.' 2--CDS Reports 7--Man With A Camera 9--Movie 4--Louis Jourdan 9--k41111onDøllar Movie 7--Salute to Dr. Dooley 7--Boxing I I--San Fran:isco Beat I I--Pro FoOtball ';'::' ':: f'*'"'•'i ::•' I !--Decoy ...:;,:....:: -. •..,..•.•:: .. ' : ' •.• '-:. 13--1vlike Wallace 13--Mike Wallace - .. 13--Full Coverage ß.:...!:. :.•..'.:• 10:30 ß ".•:':i:. "'•?71"ß I I:00 I I:00 9--Movie 2--The Late News 2--The Late News I I--Sea Hun• ß ..... :-.-.--:- . •, 4--J. M. McCaffrey 4--J. M. McCaffrey 13--Mike Wallace •--Movle •Movie ...... : ";::' ...:: ßi ß 7reNews 7--News . .. "i•-..., ,, :.%•,..... I I:00 ß'i:. :':'': 13--Dance•P:arfy 13--DanceParty 2--The Late News i!::!::f:•:s " - - ß I[:15 4--,John McCaffrey '. .... "'"' '•. a. .•...; .2--The' L•e' Show I I: 15 ?::...,' .:o...-.,•,'--.-:>.. .:..:.' , ,4'. 5--Movie .• .-.i:• . . ======ß-: :: - .• ' 4--Jack Parr 2•-I•l.ovie 7--News ß :'..... '•.,..-:.•. '•'• ß 7-•Variety 4--Ja•:k Parr I I--News ß and Weather 7--Everything Goes 13--Dance Party •.:'.• - .- :•::.i":'.:.-:• ...... :. .. :.... '" 12:40 I I--Movle ! •. • ß . ..:. .. 2--The Late, Late Show 11:15 ..::.' .:.::".:-"": .-...: ß• .:•., : " ':: ßi.:'"' '"'ß ß 2:00 2--Late Show 2--Late, Late Show 't--Jack Parr ::'. ;.:.•' ß • ß . ....:- >..• -•:-• 'x: 7--Everythincj Goes TUESDAY .. I I--Moyle '-• ß ß ...... :.•,.. a... ß ' "'-': . NOVEMBER10 WEDNESDAY 12:55 iRORY CALHOUN..ß stars a.• 'OUR TOWN' STAR--"The A• 5:30 2--Late, Late Show i"The Texan" on the CBS Tele• Carney Show" will pre.ent 2--The Early Show ßvision Networksß Thornton Wilder's American 4--Movie Four NOVE.,4•3ERIi 7--Rin Tin Tin classic,"Our Town,"in a 9•- THURSDAY minutecolorcast Friday, Nov. 9--Movle 5:30 en the NBC-TV Network.Art Ca• 13--Ask'TheCamera 2--The EarlyShow _naywill portray the Stage 6:00 4--Movie 4 NOVEMBC_R 12 ager who comments on t'l• •Nufs. and Bugs 7--M¾ FriendFlicks events in a small New Englaffd.- 7--Littl• Rascals 9--Movie 5:30 village--birth, life, death anc• I I--Popeye I I--ThreeStooges 2--M.ovle the lesser joy8 and 80trow8 'Of 13--JoFred Muggs 13--As[:the C:mera 4•Movie 4 : humankind. - 6:30 7--My Friends Filcka ß 4--News 6:00 .. -.-.. 9--Movie .... S--Sandy Becker 5--Cartoons - ..

ß I I--Three Stooges •?"":'"ß ' ':i 7--Newstee| . 7--Little Rascals .. 13--Ask the Camera • . I I--•u.:ck D:aw McCarawI I--Popeye ::-.'ß . :.".• ß . .- . .:..:::::.- ...... :. . ß 13--Ratethe Records 13--J. FredMuggs 6:00 !' '.:• :<:: 5•Nuts and Bugs .::':.x .;...•. :: .: " '.":':6:45 6:30 7--Little Rascals 4--News 4--News : .•.• • .- .. I I--Popeye ...... 7--News 5•Carfoons 13--J. Fred Muggs '- 7:00 7--Newsreels ß ß •,.-..i.-'-•.'-.., "... ."'. "':'?;.•. ß½'::-:..:... '....-..-' .' . •...:. '., ': .. 2--World'News I I--Brave.Stallion 6:30 "ß'• .....'":•;.'...'-'....:.._'-"•c';;'.':'• ..-..?':"''-.•..•: &--PhllSi!vers 13--Ratethe Records 4--News 5--Scotland Yard 5--Cartoons . ...;...... ::...... i 7•un|.onPacific 6:45 7--Newsreels 9--TerrytownCircus 4--News I I--Huckleberry Hound -. . •.'.•.•":::.....:.....-..: ..... ß .-. I I--KevJn__K_-ennedy;--News 13--Rate the Records 13--Highws ¾-Patrol ::...:::.::...i:.::.::-:•- :::•?'-.-: 7-:15' 7:00 6:45 -•.... --:::.-...... ß.::..::.: 2--N-ews 2--World News 4•News

I I--JohnTill_man. Z--DeathValley Days 7--News ß 7:30 5--Adv. of Jim Bowie ß 2--Grand Ju_ry 7--U. S. Border,Petrol 7:00 DAN BLOCKER- As Ho.. Cart- .4--Laramle 9--Terrytown Circus 4--V•'arnlng .'•---Biq Story I I--News •Sherlff of Cochise wright, who•e •u.per.human •trength i• matched 'only by a ... 7--Sugarfoot 13--Highway Patrol 7--Tugboat Annie gentle spirit, Dan Blocker stars 9•Movle 9--Cartoons EDWARD R. MURROW ß ß ;'"•' in the NBC-TV Network "Bonan- One of' the '•arrators on' t'-']ie I tmFllght '7:15 I I--Kevin Kennedy ß a" Western colorcast series Sat- 13--Newsbeet 2--News 13--Highway Patrol new series "CBS Reports,"'Oa 8-:00 I I--John Tillman--News urday nights. the'CBS Television •etwork• :.:.,,.... 2•De.nnls O'Keefe 7:15

5---Sherlock'Holmes 7:30 2--News t I I•Public.'-Defender 2--Lineup I I---News 13--P!ayof the Week 4--Wagon Train '8:30 5•Mr. District.AHorney 7:30 2'D:$:.•:[•' •ifilS'" 7--Cou-fof LastResort 2--To Te!l The Truth 4"Fi•be'r:i•Gee & Molly 9--Movle 'l--Plalnsman 5--C'i.ty::•,ssignmenf I I--Air Power 5--White Hunter 7--Life of Wyaff-Earp 13--Newsbeat 9•Movie I I---Whirpool 7•aLe Storm -= 9:00- 8:00 I I--You Are There 5--Medic 13--Newsbeat

2---Tightr0pe .... 4--Arthur Murray 7--Hobby Lobby 5--Wresfllng I I--Mr. Adam.,, & Eve 8:00 ß: - .....- :•.::•....?... :. .: . 13_--Play of the Week ß•:i-:•.i.'" .: '•:' ;.:i• ...... :.•' •..... 7•Rifleman 2--Bet!y Hutton x: •.. : ' .- -!.• :: .':..%..?... '•- ': 9•BaSeball ß ß 4--Be • Masterson I I--Col, Flack. 8:30 5•Byllne i ...... -.:....ß 7--Donna Reed 9:30 2--Men Into Space I I--Meet McC=raw 2--Red Skelfon 4--Prlce Is Right :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::•. ! 5--Movle 13--Play of the Week 4--Sfe'rflme 7•zzie & Harriet i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:i:•:i:E:i:i:i:!:i:i:!:!:i:i:!::...'•' -- ! • ' 7--Philip. Marlowe I I•.ode 3 8:30 ; i::i::i::!::i::!iiii::•::i::i::f:•iiii::!i!iiiiiiiiii!...... -'" '""-"::: :' " I .,• 9--I'm The Law 9:00 I I--Deadllne 2•ohnny Ringo ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::' -• •E" 2--The Millionaire 4--Staccato .• •-•:'. • • 4•Perry Como S--Doug FairbanksTheatre :::•' ! 0:00 ...... 7--Hawallan Eye 7--Real McCoys , ..• 2--Garry Moore 9--Movle ! I--Navy Log RICHARD BOONE plays '•' 7--Alcoa Presents. 11--26 191an. MARVIN MILLER . . . seen 9--Strange Stories 9:30 9:00 weekly on "The Millionaire" "Have Gun, 'Will Travel,'.,.-•.on'•" I I--Stero Trooper 2--I've C=of A Secret 2--Sane C=rey on the CBS Television l•et- the CBS Television Network. 13-•Full ' Coverage I I--Californlans 4--Bache!or Father work.ß

'?' . PaEe Twelve TheCn•m./-;':'.•::?:: .,._•-•?•.

.•. • S---Prof. -Wrestling 13--Ask the Camera 7•Man From Black Hawk New Jersey ranks sixth in the 7mPa'• Boone I I•Panic nation in the value of manufac- 9mMovJe 6:00. tured products and first in the 9:00 I I•Thls Man Dawson 5•Carfoons dollar value of chemical products. 7--L;tfle Rascals 2--Desilu Playhouse 5•Theafre 5 ß 9:30 I I•Popeye 2--Playhouse 90 13•J. Fred Muggs 7-- 4---Ernie Ford 9--Wr•sfli.ng 7--Untouchhables I I•Man From the West 6:30 !l•Love Story 4•News 13--1 Spy 9:30 5•arfoons 4•M Squad 10:00 7reNewsreels I I•lt's A Great Life 4•Grouch.o Marx I I-- ß , f 13--Rate the Records .,) I !--Trrackdown 13--Full Coverage I 0:00 - 6:45 2mTwilighfZone 10.:30 •Music, Shuber';'Alley ' 4•Law',ess Years 4--News 5--No':'For Hire 7--Take A Look 7---News 7•Defecfivesl 9---Movio I I•Hiram Holiday 7:00 13•Full Coverage I I•Shotcjun Slade 2•World News 13•Mike Wallace 4---Lockup 10:30 I1:00 5•1 Led ThreeLives 2--Personto Person 2--The Late News 7mU. S. Marshal 5--Official Detective 4•J. M. McCaffrey 9-:-TerryfoonCircus 7•B!ack Saddle 5--Movie I I•Kevin Kennedy 9•Movie 7reNews 13•HighwayPatrol I I.--Giant Club I I--News 13mMike Wallace 7:15 .,. ! 3•Danco Party 2•News I I:00 :DAVID JANSSEN -- As a suave 11:15 I I--News 2--The News 2•The Late Show •but tough Hollywood sleuth, 7:30 4--John M. McCaffrey 'David Janssen stars in the title 4•Jack Paar 2•Rawhide 5•Movie role of the NBC-TV Network's 7•Variefy Show 4•People Are Funny 7•News I I--Movie -new Monday night series, "Flich- 5•annon Ball 9--Movle ard Diamond, Private Detective." 12:313 7--Waif Disney I I--News ._. GEORGENADER -- In the typ• of role he likes best, that of al 2•Lafe. Late Show 9--Movie 13--Dance Party 13--Newsbeef danger-huntingscientist, George I -i Nader returns to television aal 8:00 star of the new NBC-TV Network! 4•Troubleshoofers I I: 15 Saturdaynight series, "The ManJ NOVEMBER 13 5--Night Court 2•Movie 13•Play of 'the Week 4--J.ack Paar andthe traysChallenge," Glenn BartonßNader por-] 5:30 7mVariefy Show J'0 ß ' '.:E.-::.- '-.." • 2raThe Early Show 8:30 I I--All Star Movie 4•Movie 2•Hofel De Pares ß.... :.. -.....:....:.... --.....:. ?•Rin Tin Tin 4•Ar• Carney 12:50 ß-...... 9--MoYle 5•Rackef Squad 2•The Late, Late Show ß . .. ß -o I I•Three Stooges •.•. ': ..ß ...... ;..- ... :....-'• J _ • .'.¾•:-"'"•"-: .- •.

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...... POORLITTLE _ DCIG-/ '* - . •ECAUSEHE WAGA ' T•IJE AND AND F•IEND* TOHIS •A$'TER,, G,14. Chil½•]ir/• OF rail lid wN RodeoCa/iF., I?. ¾E;AR OLD *t•o88•E ß A J liv½$t;ook• '! • ! •5ou/da't mvlt You œ nt//You Saved •EL, WASLEFT A $•,978 ESTATE-WIT•J J5w•ade, '•O•1• A Thoumad Ddhu•-- But Since You C,.A,.WNCNIZoy, TO ke. LIVEvu,,•l OUTow',,•, 1.415 was LIFE ar:g•nl:•IN COM, C•a•i•FO•T... . L WOC)•• " Tax, at Five -- ! Gu4• T/mr. C/•ee Eaou

TBE CHI•ONICLE Page•I•nirt. een By S,'I'EW•T ROBERTSON she hated to tear h'erself away. husband who would provide furs, jewels, When you run such a place as'I do, with She was back again that evening, 'her eyes big house and foreign travel," she sai window lettering .reading BARBARA'S flickering around the window before they gazing at Uncle Ambrose propped again? BARGAINS, it is necessary to develop a came to rest on Uncl'e Ambrose, and then the teapot, "and I allowed myself a year tq sympathetic front that will not let the custo- she settled into a ten-minute trance. When get them. If I failed, I'd go home. Well, I'r•. mers suspect. that you think. they must be she had gone, I went out on the sidewalk to on my seventh month, and I i think about.' crazy. My business is not antiques, nor is it test the full effect of my relative, but some- to realize my hopes. But the trouble is, Miss what is called a thrift shop, but it is some- how he didn't do a thing to me•or anyone Barbara, that Bill is the one I really love. -where between the two, offering an assort- else but that freckled kid. She took to stop- It's terrible! I thought things like that only ment of semi-artistic rubbish that is sure to ping by on her way to and from work, and happened in books." appeal to someone. And I have just watched I would spy on her affair with th'e old "Where do you think authors get their the door close on the most gullible lithe chromo. It began to give me the creeps. plots?" I asked. "You can do what they do sweetheart of them all, which is why I am Barbara, I said to myself, stop being so --make the ending to suit yourself. If you're wiping my glasses free of som'ething that inquisitive. There's no mystery. But seeing going now, you may have the picture with- seems tO be tears. her standing, there, as before a shrine, told out charge. Only I'm wondering why you It aal started a .month ago. I had just sold me that something was queer. She was wan• it." a couple of ugly rococo rigurines to a wom- young and fresh as a flower, with a way of "He fascinatesme," Jennie said .softly. She an who obviously thought she was getting .ooking about her that made me think she was smiling, but it seemed to be only a m/tsk the better of me, and when I put the eight came from out of town, so I was leaning in for something troub]'ed and uneasy. I tol-d dollars- seven-fifty profit in my cash the doorway when she came by that evening. her to drop in any t•ime, and she said she box, I winked at the photo of Uncle Am- "Hello," I said. "Could you be from up- would, but as I let her out into Third Ave., brose that I kept on my desk for no particu- state?" I waspretty certain that I wouldnever se':• lar reason. He was quite a character, and I "Yes, Maple Grove," nodded Freckles. her again. thought of something I heard him say when "How did you know?" I was wrong, of course. One week lateo I was a child. "Suckers are that way :because "I'm a small towner myself," I told her, she marched in, bright and shining an they want to be.'" So it occurred to me that "Would you like to come in and have a lovelier than ever. "I'm going home tomos. someone might even be foolish enough to closer look at that picture?" row morning," she said happily, "and here'.• buy Uncle Ambrose, and for a lark I decided She blushed. "I'd like to buy it. I've been why. I could have had the minks and th to offer him to the public. trying to make myself do it all week." All diamonds and all that, Miss Barbara, bu, Uncle Ambrose was no beauty. His hair- at once she looked older and rather miser- I've suspected for som• ti,me and found' com,b was an old-fashioned bartender's bang, able. "I must have him," she said in an ex- out for sure the other night- that marriage- and he had disconcerting light grey eyes in hausted sort of voice. "Do you know who didn'! go •ith them. That's why I've needed a long, coffin-shaped face. His expression he is?" the picture. Whenever I felt like weakening, was s[ern and dogged, and yet rather sad, "Now, how should I know?" I shrugged. I'd put myself in the power of those blazing: which was rather peculiar, as I heard he was "Just some old timer off somebody's dresser. eyes that seemed to accuse me and exp'-ec•. fond of saying that he never regretted any- Let's discuss him over a cup of tea. I'm just the best of me at the same time. And tha• thing. Anyhow, I made him the centerpiece about to clos'e up and make some." grave, uncompromising face! Th'ere was of a jumbled window display, and I thought But Freckles, whose name turned out to man, I felt, who would never forsake that perhaps one o.f his old flames might be Jennie, had nothing to say regarding ideals, and I could imagine him saying, "Youi happen up Third Avenue and take him to Uncle Ambrose. She was aching to talk, can't do. it, Jennie! You must believe that• her bosom for the sake of 1910. He had though, and because I have a romantic na- money isn't everything.' I--I might neve_• never had the slightest difficulty with the ture in spite of twenty years in the waiting have made my decision without the Strength} ladies, aside from getting sufficient money room of spinsterhood, I listened to the old, to spark them. old story that was so new and vexatious to heThengave fromme." a ,briefcase she drew Uncle Arn Uncle Ambrose was on view for ten days her. brose, and kissed him, ,but to me he ju• before I noticed anyone give him a second Jennie didn't want to wither away in looked glowering and cantankerous. And glance, and of all people it was an extremely Maple Grove, so she had come to the city I watched Jennie'srapt young face, I pretty girl. She was a fluffy, blue-eyed to grasp at a dream. The boy she left behind membered: "Suckers are that way becau.s•I brownette, freckled just enough to be cute, was Bill, who was tied ,by tradition to his they want to be. " So there was no ponti i' and she was staring at Uncle Ambrose with father's drugstore, which 'he would inherit telling her that Uncle Ambrose died in jail I an awed curiosity that surprised me. Then in the due course of human events. "I after robbing a bank of forty thousand' she drifted on after a false start, as though. thougq•t I was entitled to try for a wealthy dollars. Page Fourteen SHerwood 2-7138 l IRA • L AIT I E •R mir U .E_ Residence 'FAir Lawn 6-0666

JAMES S. SCULLION PREssoT•ffi•oT• 9 P E NBT Aim SIN A P and SON , _'Y WILUAM BR, , • * Home for Funerals seemed to eastern colonists 25 267-269 Park Avenue On November IS,. 1•4 about 200 years earlier. ß Oppositionto the whiskey tax E •IE• at Madison of the "whiskey rbbels" in west- grew until in the summerof 1T94 ern Pennsylvania were arrested it broke out in open rebellion. E Paterson, New Jersey by Federal troops.And the first Revenue officers were attacked, rebellion against the U.S. Gov- the houses of tax collectors ernment came to a quick end. burned. Mobs forced Federal in- It started in 1791 when the ex- spectors to flee for their lives, cise tax was passed. This was a The local authorities were help- tax on distilled spirits, one of Se- less against the rebels. B•nquet & Wedding Facilities cretary of the Tresaury Alexan- President Washington issued a der Hamilton's measures to pro- proclamation commapalingthe re- vide money 'for running the new bellious farmers to obey the law. government. This excise tax was He also sent a commission to deal great]y resented by the farmers with them. But these efforts across the Alleghany Mountains failed. Now the defiant farmers in the western part of Pennsyl- were testing the power of the fed- vania. eral government in an tnsurrec- The western frontier land of tlon against it. Could the Govern- Pennsylvania was settled mostly ment meet the test? by hardy farmers of ScotchøIrish President Washington called on descent. Grain was their main the governors of Pennsylvania, crop. But the long haul to the New Jersey, Maryland nd Vir- eastern markets across the few ginia for !5.000 militiamen. Gov- and bad mountain roads made it ernor Lee of Virginia was placed difficult for the farmers to sell In command, although Hamilton their gra;n. Moreover, Spain, in went along and actually directed possessionof the Louisianaterri- the troops' movements.When the tory, had closedthe port of New army crossedthe mountains, the Orleans to American boats. The rebels scattered There was no western farmers were thus de- bloodshed, and with the arrest of MANZELLA'S prived of the easier and cheap the leaders the revolt was over ßwater route down the Mississippi oy the middle of November. PINK ELEPHANT to the sea. From then on the law was en- If the farmers cduld not ship forced and the whiskey tax patd. Italian-American Cuisine their grain at a l•rofit .they could Hamilton had 20 of the leaders make money by distilling it into brought to Philadelphia for trial. whiskey which could be carried Only two were found guilty, and out on horseback across the President Washington pardoned I LobsterA mounta,.'ns.. They were bitter them. againstthe exciSetax for it wir•l The U.S. Government had met ottt their profit on whiskeyß The the first real test agains• its Gltegory S-9479 LODI, N.J. frontier farmers could not see authority and proved its strength why they should be made ,to l•_Y under the Constitution, tlien only ljß 466PASSAIC AVEI•rUE a tax "for drinking their grain five years old. more than for eaOng it." The whiskey tax seemed as unfair to JOEL McCREA '-- Long-reigning them as the stamp tax had as a screen star and Western JOHN G. KOTRAN he.to, McCrea, starring as Mar- Funeral Service and shal Mike Dunbar,. makes his TV debut in the Western adventure Funeral Horne series, "Wichita Town" on the 45• Riws: Stw•t NBC-TV Network, Wednesdays. The series features.his son, Jody.

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